1 / 18

Germany

Germany. CHARACTERISTICS:. Affluent Economy (despite the disequilibria between the Eastern and the Western parts of the country) Unstable territorial limits Divided between 1945 and 1990. Difficult but successful unification process. HISTORY:. First Reich: Charlemagne (800 AD)

fola
Télécharger la présentation

Germany

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Germany

  2. CHARACTERISTICS: • Affluent Economy (despite the disequilibria between the Eastern and the Western parts of the country) • Unstable territorial limits • Divided between 1945 and 1990. • Difficult but successful unification process.

  3. HISTORY: • First Reich: Charlemagne (800 AD) • Religious divisions (Protestant Reformation 1517- Southern Germany remains Catholic, while the North shifts to Protestantism). • Different regional versions of spoken German • 1648: the Treaty of Westphalia divides Germany into 360 political entities. • 1800s: Industrial development (iron and steel)—Working Class.

  4. Second Reich(1871, after the Franco-Prussian war) • Chancellor Otto von Bismark. • Weak liberal and democratic traditions • Oppositional groups:SPD (Social Democratic Party), 1875. Oldest social- democratic party in the world. • Non-German minorities and small ethnic parties • German Catholics (turned into the Christian Democratic Party later on)

  5. Problems associated with the Late unification of Germany. • Difficulties to developing a modern state • Nationalism and militarism • Authoritarian culture • Expansionism (Colonization in Africa) and engagement in wars, until WWI in 1914 • Dramatic defeat - The Versailles Treaty blamed Germany for the war, took out its colonies, and imposed the country an impossible amount of reparations.

  6. 1919 The Weimar Republic • The Kaiser was removed • Weak parliamentary democracy. • Lack of democratic traditions, lack of legitimacy (imposed by the victorious allies), catastrophic economic situation (1920s hyperinflation)

  7. 1920s – Growth of Nazism 1924- The Nazis, a very small party.Increasing political instability 1929 Depression 1932. The Nazis win a third of the German vote, and President Hindenburg names Hitler as chancellor in 1933.

  8. The Third Reich • The Nazi Party establishes a legislative majority and pass legislation for Hitler to rule by decreefor 40 yearsThird Reich. • Expansionism (Saar, Czech lands, Poland) • 1939 Britain and France declared war • Summer 1940 - Germany or ruled over almost all of Europe. • 1941 – Final Solution: Death Camps (six million Jews and a similar amount of “inconvenient Christians” (Gipsies, Poles, others) plus leftists and homosexuals were annihilated. • 1945- The Allies win the war

  9. A Divided Germany • February 1945, Postdam: the Allies divide Germany (and Berlin) into four military occupation zones. • Britain, France, and the U.S. combine their zones and create the Federal Republic of Germany (FRG) in May 1949. • Self-governed since 1949. Chancellor Adenauer (1949-1963) (CDU). “German miracle” • The Soviets create the German Democratic Republic (GDR) in October 1949. • Modern Germany resulted from foreign intervention.

  10. Federal Republic of Germany 1949-1969: Adenauer & other Christian Democratic leaders/ Economic “miracle”/Parliamentary System/Social Welfare 1969-1982:Social Democrats (Willy Brandt 1982-1990: CDU/ the Green Party German Democratic Republic 1949-1961-Socialism (the Berlin Wall) 1961-1970 (greater material benefits/GDR becomes a socialist State) 1971-1985 (starts opening and relies increasingly on the West) 1985-1989—liberalization and attempts to reunification Phases

  11. Problems of Reunification • October 3, 1990 (Dissolution of the GDR) • Imbalance (all of the FRG institutions prevail) • Economic and social problems • Westeners felt they had to pay for the integration • Easteners did not feel their situation improved (many lost their property/jobs) • Xenophobia and resurrection of neo-nazism (problem “solved” in 1992/3)

  12. German Strong Federalism • 16 Länder: education, police, mass media. • Different versions of spoken German in the regions. • Federal legislative powers • State level organized Administration and Justice system.

  13. Basic Law • Created in 1949 as a temporal document • Through time, it became the German Constitution • Amended several times Three Principles: • Germany is a Federal Republic • Germany is a State based on the rule of law • Germany guarantees the social welfare of its citizens (social welfare is seen as naturally provided by the State).

  14. GERMAN POLITICAL INSTITUTIONS Head of Government: the Chancellor, elected by the Bundestag for four years—Powerful. Selects all cabinet members (approx 20, head committees in the Bundestag) Head of State: the President, chosen by a Special Convention (five years, two-term limit). Ceremonial.

  15. Bicameral legislature: • Bundestag: 656 members (now 669) 4-year term. Largest parliament among democracies. Committee system. • Chosen through a mixed system (5% threshold): ½ through SMD (328), ½ through PR. PR votes determine % of seats – Corrective mechanism.. • Bundesrat (upper house): elected indirectly. Gvts. of the Länder (regions) send members to choose representatives.

  16. The Judiciary The German Judiciary is as important as the American Court system. In both the U.S. and Germany the Supreme Court reviews the constitutionality of laws. Federal Constitutional Court • 2 Chambers (8 justices each, chosen for one 12-year term). • -Roman Law (codified)

  17. Multi-Party System. “Two-Plus” party system: German governments almost always consist of one large party in coalition with one small party.

  18. Parliamentary vs. Presidential (Source: Roskin) Prime Minister Parties Parliament PARLIAMENTARY Coalition SELECTS AND OUSTS GUIDES Cabinet Voters Ministries PRESIDENTIAL President Parliament elect elect Cabinet Voters Ministries

More Related